Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Because every time they're nearly dry, there comes another three days of rain.

The cats may need them again this winter.

I'm fervently hoping not. The boys we had fixed can come inside; though one of them is noisy, hyperactive and stupid, the other is quite domesticated, and there is a vacancy since my favourite old lady died (Her even older sister is still in pretty good shape at 17 - these barn cats are durable!) Tiny is still living on the back porch, relatively untamed, but he has his own little house.

Wash them with baking soda and put them in a dryer. Baking soda is good for removing mold.

Bleccch! While the rains have pretty much washed away the feral tomcat piss, that stuff isn't coming into the house. We haven't had a dryer since we switched over to solar power eight years ago - it's an energy-gobbling luxury - and just at the mo, no washing machine, either. The over-designed, over-complicated Whirlpool died at not even eight years old (Remember when a washer was expected to work 20-25 years? While shopping for a new one, i came across two articles about major brand recalls.) and the new Amana (least bells and whistles) hasn't been delivered yet. We just about bend to washing our own underwear and socks by hand - zero chance we're wasting our little spare energy on foul rags.

A little off topic but fun to talk about living off the grid. You might consider something like this low-tech washing machine like the one in the link. But I think I would go even further back and replicate something from the past. I know I would have the one in the link, if I lived in a place that didn't have a laundry room a short distance from my apartment, or if I did a lot of camping. Or make a replication of a very old manual machine if I actually had my own place off the grid. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washing_machine

Low-tech & Low-impactNon-electric washers offer a water- and energy-saving solution, conserving both resources and money. Who could ask for a better alternative?These machines, which use the power of human energy, apply the simple technology of water pressure and high speed to quickly get out dirt and stains in minutes. No need to fret about exerting too much energy—a simple crank or foot pedal is all you need to use a non-electric washer, which will take the load off you.They are smaller in size, which makes them portable, great for camping or traveling, and perfect for apartments, dorms or small living spaces, especially where there is no washing unit. (Laundromat costs add up quickly and most use the less-efficient top-load machines.)WonderwashPatented pressure system forces water and detergent into fabric at high speedHand-crank powered (one turn per second)Uses 1.5-6 quarts of water, depending on laundry sizeWashing cycle: 10 seconds to 2 minutesWashes up to 5 pounds of clothes (i.e. 10 shirts, 2-3 pairs of jeans, or 30 pairs socks)Drain hose drains wash drum without needing to pick up machineCost: $45Note: Wonderwash also makes a spin dryer

How is it living off the grid? Should we start a thread for this? I really want to know more about your experience. I so wanted to get off the grid but my X could only think of reasons of why something couldn't be done. What a complete waste of intelligence. Laugh, what a miss match! I was getting all excited about making methane gas and wind power, etc., and his favorite activity seemed to be hanging in the bar and being social with all the ladies who also liked to hang in the bar. Now my body is not user-friendly, so I am afraid to be in a situation where I must be self-reliant. But if I had a good partner- I may give off the grid living a go.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Not ready to go manual; want something that can handle the quilts, coats and rugs. We did look for older and low-tech machines, but without any luck. We have plenty of water - good well; drain goes through septic tank and tile bed, back to the ground, and we always use cold water anyway, so that's not much of an issue.

How is it living off the grid?

We're not off the grid. We generate most of our own electricity, but have a converter as back-up: it kicks in at off-peak hydro period and tops up the batteries when there hasn't been enough sun - mostly in winter. (Need $3-15 worth of hydro a month, and pay $40+ for "delivery", tax, etc. -- insurance. Plus, we're growing older and will have to move at some point; want the house to saleable.) We use wood for heating - yes, burning and propane for cooking. And we still drive a normal car. Not all that squeaky-green! Others, like Zetreque are doing better, i think.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Okay, I think a thread about living off the grid might succeed considering you and Zetreque have some experience with it and I have plenty of interest in it.

This thread has been pretty successful as a gardening thread, so I want to return to that. Right now I am cooking my tomatoes and peppers into a sauce that I plan to use for many things.

I have been enjoying the beets we grew this year and think if I continue gardening, I will plant more beets.

I am really annoyed with the grass that keeps producing seeds. With my back problem, weeding is a challenge for me so I rip off the seeding part of the grass but that isn't doing the job! I am afraid to mulch as I have done in the past because that encourages squash Beatles to make my plot home. I am thinking if I garden again, I will cover the ground with an expensive covering that allows water in and is suppose to prevent weeds. Does anyone have experience with that or another solution?

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I've used cheap landscape fabric but didn't find all that effective. It helped some, but was easily displaced and torn. I think this stuff https://www.thespruce.com/how-to-install-landscape-fabrics-2132945 is meant to be used under an organic mulch or stone or gravel, rather than by itself. I kept the weeds down fairly well the first couple of months after we put in the new strawberry plants last summer. For winter, I covered them in raked leaves held down by twiggy branches (my reliable standby for all kinds of jobs). Once the strawberries going this spring, they could compete with everything but the most aggressive ragweed and nettles. (How like a sissy I feel, pulling those in my heavy gloves and recall my grandmother picking much bigger, tougher nettles with her brown, big-knuckled hands and throwing a bunch across a chopping block to cut up for the ducklings!)This http://www.tubex.com/products/mulch-mats-weed-control-fabric.php looks more expensive and durable, but I'm pretty sure it would still provide plenty of shelter for slugs and bugs.

Perhaps a better, cheaper and more lasting option is finding the right tool or tools. Some suggestions - though, all but the last two look as if they require a lot of bending, they definitely come in long-handled variety. http://gardeningproductsreview.com/best-weeding-tools/

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I have a few acres of land in a unincorporated forest village I guess you could call it. Was thinking of starting a little garden and was wondering what would grow well in cold weather since winter will be here soon. I am guessing lettuce and potaters might do well. So far I am growing a jade plant to see if I have a green thumb or if I am a plant murderer, we shall see. Also I hear jade plants bring money into the household, seems legit to me!

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Infinite_Observer » September 11th, 2017, 7:04 am wrote:I have a few acres of land in a unincorporated forest village I guess you could call it. Was thinking of starting a little garden and was wondering what would grow well in cold weather since winter will be here soon. I am guessing lettuce and potaters might do well. So far I am growing a jade plant to see if I have a green thumb or if I am a plant murderer, we shall see. Also I hear jade plants bring money into the household, seems legit to me!

This: https://www.treehugger.com/lawn-garden/what-forest-garden.html is the kind of gardening you should start. Not much doing in fall, of course, but it's a good time to plant shrubs: raspberries and blueberries do well in a cold climate; Saskatoon berries are hardy and need no maintenance once established. Spinach and lettuce are cool-weather crops; you could just about get some mesclun in late October if you get those seeds in right now. Too late for root crops, unless you're starting parsnip and turnip for next year. But there is a lot you can grow in hydroponic or window boxes, alongside the jade plant. Succulents are nearly indestructible, so you should do just fine.

A minute ago, there was a wonderful little Hobbit house in the advertising box under this one. It might come back.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Thanks for the info! Will definately check out the site. Speaking of saskatoon berries I never heard of them ever until like an hour ago when I was looking up what pemmican is and read they mix those in with the meat so its funny. Like as soon as you hear about something you keep hearing about it more and more often. A phenomenon that occurs quite often in my life.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Synchronicity! I think it's about attention. You may have heard the word before, but it had no meaningful context for you, so it went right out the other ear. Once you're focused on a subject, or cluster of related subjects, the same word, idea or "meme" jumps out at you from everywhere.

Here is another good candidate https://www.starkbros.com/growing-guide/how-to-grow/berry-plants/jostaberry-plantsI've had fairly decent crops of gooseberry and currant in gravelly soil. My young blueberry bushes - for which I double-dug, composted and acidified a separate little plot - got destroyed in winter, so if you have lots of heavy snow, it's a good idea to provide them some protection - either plant them in among larger woody things or build a tent over them.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

My swish chard is the only thing doing very well, great even. Peppers and squash are just flowering and starting to produce fruit. I feel better knowing IO is just starting to plant. I feel better about my garden, this close to fall. I'm looking into a better soil for next year.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I've got a field guide, but have never been brave enough to eat what I picked. Except puffballs, which we didn't like, and morels that are just starting to spread near the house (I don't poach my neighbours' patch) that I want to encourage for next spring.

I have officially resigned from cultivating oysters. Four consecutive attempts, taking every recommended precaution, resulted in green slimy fungus-infested coffee grounds surrounded by tiny flies. I have reclaimed that cupboard for pantry space. If we get an irresistible craving for oyster mushrooms, I'll just have to grit my remaining teeth and pay $6 at Zehr's.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I can't believe nobody else is growing their own food this year!I've worked over the outside beds, planted peas and corn and prepared the ground (by burying compost underneath) for the squashes gathering strength in the greenhouse.We recently transplanted all the the tomato, eggplant and pepper seedlings to their big permanent bins.Herbs are still too small for outdoors, but the cucumbers went into their containers on the front deck on June 1st. Runner beans are 4" tall - OK, so far.

This year's project: build 18x18" troughs, up on cement blocks, for the strawberries. In the present bed, they're hard to pick, unweedable and running amok all over the walkway.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I've killed my house plant by accident. And i found it left in the pot near the garbage on the street one month ago and i was hoping that i've saved him :( My parents are biologists, my family is growing plants for a long time. What a shame :(

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Dandelions make a fine houseplant. Cheap, too. Just lift one from anywhere along the road, plunk it in some earth in a pot and water once in a while. They're hardy, fast growing, bloom wonderfully and you can pick the young leaves for salad.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I have a large garden with carrots char beets all sprouting. I planted tomatoes, squash cucs of several variety's. I got several trays of plants from a friend so it will be garden surprise, to see what grows into what. I'm also trying asparagus, but that's a 3 year wait. I was hoping to get some strawberries, but not some far. I tried them from seed but no luck with that.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Watson » June 12th, 2018, 3:10 pm wrote:I have a large garden with carrots char beets all sprouting. I planted tomatoes, squash cucs of several variety's. I got several trays of plants from a friend so it will be garden surprise, to see what grows into what. I'm also trying asparagus, but that's a 3 year wait. I was hoping to get some strawberries, but not some far. I tried them from seed but no luck with that.

I'll send you some! Actually, I could: these little guys are tough enough to survive a trip to Mars, but I don't think it's legal to send them cross-border. I've been giving away dozens at the gate. They're three heritage varieties that I bought a few plants each, two years ago. They all did well last summer; bore lots of small, very tasty fruit. A pain to pick, though, which is why I'm moving them into raised boxes - that, and small rodents get to the berries before I see them.

We did bring asparagus crowns from our old place when we moved here. Dug the regulation trench, lined with stones; prepared the good soil, top-dressed them... but could never stay ahead of the weeds. I still nab the odd little spear before it turns into florist's greenery, but have pretty much given up cultivating them.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Well the Mantario is not heavily protected, but strawberries only produce for 3 years. Then they are just weeds that grow like crazy. If you have small berries, it could be they are past the prime producing age.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

Watson » June 12th, 2018, 9:58 pm wrote:Well the Mantario is not heavily protected, but strawberries only produce for 3 years. Then they are just weeds that grow like crazy. If you have small berries, it could be they are past the prime producing age.

No, the original stock is only two years old, and there are lots of last year's offspring already in bloom. The reason the fruit is small is these are not the overbred hybrids that commercial growers plant; they're old, native varieties. Can't recall what they're called - Alpine and something. One is an early-season light red, one is a late, prolific purply-red, and the sweetest one has long, pointed, dark red berries, from late June to late September.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I've left two volunteer wild daisies in my vegetable patch for the second year. The stems are longer and the flowers are larger than those outside the fence. I think they're becoming garden plants, like the feral barn-cats are becoming pets, just because they have a better life.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

I've recently brought in the dwarf orange and hibiscus that summer on the deck. I've decided - reluctantly, sadly, but they were just too big for the house - to leave the three 40-year-old oleanders outside last year and they died, so I needn't worry about where to put them. This year, I'll let the poinsettias go the same way, so there will be no poisonous plants in the house.

Haven't brought in any of the basil yet, but lugged half the peppers into the greenhouse, to save them from a thunderstorm, hail, 100km gusts predicted for this afternoon. I hope my late peas survive.

Re: Gardening: What are you growing ?

It's not spring yet, but time to start hoping!The seed catalogues are here and well-thumbed. I'm keen to try those tiny melon-cucumbers this year. We've started seedling for tomato and pepper. The hydroponic greens (new experiment - so far, so good) are big enough to eat.

Far more interesting, in the front yard, we have a flock of seven wild turkeys. (Shee-eet, those things are big!) This is the third day in a row I've seen them; they must be sojourning in the old gravel pit on our south side, where the brush has grown in enough to provide cover and shelter. This time, they didn't just pass through, they hung out in the driveway for an hour or more, scratching at the snow. I've been tossing leftovers out there for the crows, and after sighting the turkeys, I added pre-soaked beans. I haven't any corn, but I'll buy some next time we're in town. They must be having a really hard time to come this close to the house.

It's a long, deep winter - we're already low on firewood; the greenhouse is sucking heat from the house. Must order an extra load this year, if we're to keep producing all winter.